Tuesday, February 28, 2012

The Case of Jeremy Lin -- an opinion

Jeremy Lin had a sudden celebrity rise as the newest point guard and NBA star for the NY Knicks. He has been the subject of NY Times coverage, including an op-ed by David Brooks, a moderate Conservative. Among the focus of interest of his media coverage is the intact Chinese family he comes from, and his Christian faith.

Along with others concerned about his almost meteoric media ascent, we sensed he needs to be schooled in how other Asian American athletes who preceded him, their fame, not as celebrities but at being top in their game, and the relative impact they have had in sports in the USA.

Before we, the collective body of sport’s fans, crown him to be the next big thing or the “it” of Asian American athletes, presage of younger Asian boys and girls to pick up a basketball and aspire to play professional sports, we need to remember other Asian American and Pacific Islander world class athletes.

Competed as Olympians


Apolo Anton Ohno, short track speed skater. Raised by a single parent, his father. He is an eight-time Olympic medalist (2002, 2006, & 2010); three-time World Cup overall champion (2001, 2003, 2005); seven-time World Cup event champion, and seven-time U.S. short track overall champion (1997, 1999, 2001-2005).

Michele Kwan has won nine U.S. championships, five world championships, and two Olympic medals in figure skating. Her parents are Chinese immigrants from Hong Kong.

Greg Louganis, whose legacy as an Olympic diver earned him a place as the most recognizable Pacific Islander athlete today and perhaps in history. He was born to parents of Samoan and Swedish ancestry, later adopted at nine months by Peter and Frances Louganis.


Tai Babilonia, skating partner of Randy Garner, the pair were five-time gold medalists at the U.S. Figure Skating Championships and won the gold medal at the 1979 World Figure Skating Championships. Thai’s father is Filipino and mother is
African American with Hopi ancestry.


Other Sports


Tim Lincecum, World Champion SF Giants pitcher and Cy Young Award winner, is still on the mound with his unorthodox delivery and long hair. He is the son of a great-granddaughter of a Filipino immigrant, a fourth generation Filipino American. His father is Caucasian, his mother’s family dates back to being among the first generation of farm laborers brought to Hawaii.

At 17 years, 3 months old, Michael Chang became the youngest male Grand Slam champion in history by outlasting Stefan Edberg in a five-set thriller and snapped a 34-year-old drought by American men on the red clay of Roland Garros. He won the French Open in 1989. His parents both grew up in Taiwan, and immigrated first to Hoboken, NJ.

Tiger Woods achievements to date rank him among the most successful golfer of all time, winning 14 major professional golf championships, second to Jack Nicklaus with 18. His father is African American, Chinese, and Native American ancestry. His mother is (née Punsawad) originally from Thailand is of mixed Thai, Chinese, and Dutch ancestry.

There is little doubt of the aforementioned athlete’s feats and accomplishments. Clearly they are recognized as “world class,” Mr. Lin, has a long way to go till he can stand shoulder to shoulder on the podium with them.

The subject of the intact family and Lin’s athletic ability rings of “American Tokenism.” He is the first to break into the media ranks of professional basketball. Why is that the case?

He comes from a Christian and an intact family, could this be a perpetuation of the “idealized nuclear family” value of American conservatives and the venerable “model minority” mold. Mr. Lin and his supporters a cautionary note, be wary of this subtext.

Americans of the “dominant culture” uses wedge issues, including, the “successful immigrant family” such as the Chang’s, Kwan’s, and the Lin’s, versus other immigrant communities who have lesser mention in the discourse of American life. To be clear, immigrants are often the scapegoats of for high unemployment, higher cost of education and healthcare, and increasing taxes.

A lesson about America’s unresolved tension and conflicts about race, continuous to play out in the Asian American athlete's story. How does the American Corporate media cover communities of color? Let’s have a cursory look at the shelf life of these Asian American athletes, and what we were told about them in their coverage.

How long was the media limelight focused on these world class athletes? For many, they are nearly forgotten. Further, how much did we see or hear of the multi-ethnic perspective: Ms. Babylonia’s racial admixture is Afro-Asiatic. Her father is of Filipino ethnicity and her mother's is African-American and includes Hopi Indian ancestry. Tiger Woods would belong to the same category, father identified as African American, and his mother Asian, yet they were both of mix ancestry. Linsecum is the son of a third generation Filipina immigrant and a Caucasian father. Is he white or how Filipino does he need to be? Was it omission when the media did not discuss multi-race parents and subsequent multi race children and siblings and the influences it may have had in shaping their progeny.

The athleticism is what counts and matters to the press. We are a race-neutral society, right? Somehow in the narrative of pulling up your boot straps, your ethnic and cultural heritage has no place. Even more so, if you want to be an ongoing story or a bi-line in the media.

Ah, Mr. Ohno is a special case, from the other athletes -being raised by a single parent, his Dad. Mr. Ohno, the father, was the model of stoicism, when seeing him at every race. Moreover, Apolo has cross-over appeal -the cover of Cosmopolitan, being featured on Vanity Fair, and amongst the featured athletes on ESPN body issue. American lore also likes the exception.




For other Asian Athletes worthy of mention and ongoing coverage, and not necessarily media stars or starlet, follow the link below.

http://www.examiner.com/asian-american-sports-in-national/10-best-asian-american-athletes

Wednesday, February 22, 2012

Who is my audience and Thank you for your interest.

It intrigues me having readers from places where I have little to no social contact.

Understandably, many of my dear readers are Americans from the US, since I live here. Among European readers, I have a few family members in Germany perhaps those links serve as the stake on the ground from which that countries readership stems.

Readers from other central European nations the Netherlands and France, amuse me, since I have fond memories of my visits to large destination cities from travels early in my adult life.

The Iranians, Russians, Nigerians and the very minute number of readers from Ukraine is perplexing. If I review the various better read post and attempt to associate them with any of these nations, I am clueless as to what may be the attraction.

Is it my American travelogues (specially New York City and New Orleans); witty descriptions of life in the gay mecca as a single man (the hair issue, the unattached among us); or is it my re-distribution of notable articles, essays on topics of interest to me?

On the opposite side, I do not have readers from South America, or India and the Middle East. I will have to think on that and see if I can draw an even broader audience.

In any case, I appreciate being read on the occasions that folks do, especially the more creative output of prose.

I am looking forward to blogging about the upcoming International AIDS Conference, to which I will be a delegate and hope that a submitted abstract will be accepted as a presentation. Similarly, meeting and writing more about Germans and about Germany, since I will be there this summer, with a trip to Berlin on the drawing board.

Happy reading.

The current audience tracker (with over 2,100 page views)...

United States 1,102
Netherlands 223
France 144
Germany 135
Iran 92
Russia 91
China 35
Malaysia 26
Nigeria 26
Ukraine 2

Friday, February 17, 2012

NOLA on my mind...

New Orleans is one of my favorite places in the US, second only to NYC. After a review of my post on the blogger, I did not fully appreciate how often I wrote about it. I celebrated: an important event "a milestone birthday," New Year’s Eve 2010; attended an annual Essence festival during the 4th of July weekend; and visited often one of my oldest and dearest friend Angelamia and her partner Ginger who live and thrive in the Big Easy.

My interest is perhaps a tribute and an acknowledgement of the legacy of Filipinos living in the Bayou, and the welcome I experience during every visit. My lingering feelings of shame about being an American as we witnessed what happens to a city devastated by two catastrophes: Katrina and the Federal response, also plays a role. More importantly it marks how important Angelamia is in my life.

Here is a recount, to get the full shebang. Each title has a link that will bring you to the entry. Upon reading them, I hope you get a flavor of the why for my frequent return.

A Filipino in New Orleans.

Where is Daniel? NOLA for the 4th

NOLA Reprise

A day in NOLA

More on the Birthday

NYE, Bday, and days in NOLA http://a-onechronicle.blogspot.com/2010/01/nye-bday-and-days-in-nola.html

WOW Gustav veers Northwest sparing New Orleans

Gustav, NOLA and Daniel (part 3)

Gustav

Florida Avenue Canal, 7th Ward

Gustav, NOLA and Daniel (part 1)

Two Thirds of Katrina Donations Exhausted

Fed Supported Mercenaries in NOLA

Purging the Poor by Naomi Klein on NOLA Reconstruction

Did Katrina Blow off the White Sheets of American Racism?

A RANT – let’s look back to the future (Katrina in our mind)

Monday, February 06, 2012

On the Social Front and Not

On the Social Front and Not

It is Heart Month...
A yellow homeland security alert

January and the start of February has been event-filled
the listing not necessarily in any order

A single man at a dinner party for 8
An unattached diner partaking on bar eats at a neighborhood restaurant
Dress to the nines for a fundraising event at the newly refurbished SF "W" accompanying a dear friend
Online presence in various sites
Hanging out with chums/buddies at a neighborhood pub
Attending a monthly neighborhood art stroll "The murmur"
Stopping by to greet friends at a local temporary contemporary monthly gallery
Watching the 99ers play the Giants for the NFC title awash in Red and Gold dressed fans
Feasting on oysters with the BGF (best girl friend)during the birthday month
Dining in town with friends during Oakland's Restaurant Week
Treasure hunting at the Oakland Museum White Elephant Sale

All the while seeking conversation,
a subtle flirtation, a connection though not necessarily a date,
socializing is the intention

Can living as a single urbanite be any more nuanced or mundane?

Time at home
Laden with activities of daily living:
Housecleaning, clothes washing, grocery shopping,
Weeding through belongings no longer needed,
Hanging art work with help from a friend,
Assembling furniture,
Potting succulents for the expanding dry garden,
Strolling through the Sunday Farmer’s Market and
the nearest Ace Hardware store
Wading through the paper bills for 4 persons
(mother, stepfather, brother and self),
Investigating short term housing options for elderly parents
Catching up on the growing Atlantic Magazine pile
Settling into a routine
after recent move
Preparing for coming days in a month's period
Work travel looming and parents visiting.
Re-grouping to assess if projects
designated for the winter will be realized
Wistfully wondering
will the rains fall and the freeze inducing temperatures return?


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